Trump win boosts drug
stocks as prospect of price curbs recedes
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[November 09, 2016]
By Ben Hirschler
LONDON
(Reuters) - Pharmaceutical stocks surged in Europe on Wednesday as
Republican Donald Trump's U.S. presidential election win led investors
to conclude the threat of tough action on drug pricing had receded.
News that a California ballot initiative aimed at reining in rising
prices for prescription drugs was headed for defeat also buoyed the
mood, with shares in major European drugmakers rising between 2 and 6
percent
Trump's victory over Hillary Clinton, whose drug pricing criticisms have
weighed on shares for more than a year, is not without risk, however. A
Republican pledge to repeal Obamacare could have potentially chaotic
consequences.
Zuercher Kantonalbank analyst Michael Nawrath said uncertainty over how
Trump will make good on his promise to scrap the Affordable Care Act,
widely known as Obamacare, could weigh in the months ahead.
"He'll clearly have advisers helping him. We're going to have to see
which proposals emerge," he said.
Healthcare was the biggest sector gainer in Europe following Trump's
win, with the Stoxx 600 healthcare index <.SXDP> up 3.5 percent by 0530
ET.
Danish insulin maker Novo Nordisk <NOVOb.CO>, whose diabetes drug prices
have been under fire recently in the United States, saw some of the
largest gains, rising 6 percent.
A spokesman for Novo, which generates more than half of its sales in the
United States, said the company was pleased by the Californian ballot
news, but added that it was "unpredictable" what the Trump presidency
meant for the drugs industry.
Shares in other major drugmakers like Roche, Novartis, Sanofi,
AstraZeneca <AZN.L> and GlaxoSmithKline rose between 2 and 4.5
percent.
U.S. drugmaker Mylan, which has come under fire in recent months for
hiking the price of its two-pack EpiPen allergy shot to more than $600,
leapt 8 percent in Tel Aviv.
Throughout the campaign Clinton had been far more critical of drug
industry pricing than Trump, famously sending drug stocks into a
tailspin in September 2015 when she tweeted about specialty drug "price
gouging".
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A trader sits in front of the computer screens at his desk at the
Frankfurt stock exchange, Germany, June 29, 2015. . REUTERS/Ralph
Orlowski
Trump has said less on the topic but he has suggested support for
importation of cheaper drugs, as well as advocating increased scrutiny
over drug price increases and a bigger role for negotiating down the
cost of medicines.
Marie Owens-Thomsen, chief economist at Indosuez Wealth Management,
believes the idea that he is the good news candidate for the
pharmaceuticals industry is "a bit of a simplistic view".
"He has made several statements that are also potentially harmful," she
said.
Jefferies analysts said U.S. pricing pressure and political reform would
remain a concern but Trump's win would be a relief for investors worried
about a sea change in the U.S. system, where innovation is rewarded by
high prices.
Switzerland's Roche, the world's biggest maker of cancer drugs, echoed
the belief that the United States would remain a rewarding market.
"Roche is focused on developing innovative medications and diagnostic
tests and we are convinced that the U.S. will continue to value and
support innovation and medical progress," said a company spokesman.
(Additional reporting by John Miller in Zurich and Annabella Pultz
Nielsen in Copenhagen; Editing by Pravin Char)
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